Free Read Novels Online Home

The Devil's Thief by Lisa Maxwell (45)

SOME DISTANT STATION

1904—New Jersey

You should have let me kill him,” Esta said, feeling herself go cold as she drew back from Harte. Because one thing was clear: None of this would have happened if he hadn’t stopped her from killing Jack. They would still have the Book, for one. And they would still be in 1902, because Jack wouldn’t have been chasing them.

She could have done it.

She could have gladly carried that burden with her for the rest of her life. She had no way of knowing what effect her inaction would have, but she knew one thing—nothing good could come from Jack getting ahold of the Book.

Harte was still sitting on the platform at the back of the train when she pulled herself to her feet. He looked pale and unsteady, but Esta was having a hard time finding any more sympathy.

“You shouldn’t have stopped me,” she continued.

“And then what?” Harte asked. “You would have just walked away, with his blood on your hands?”

“Better his blood than ours.”

Harte scrubbed his hand down over his face, expelling a ragged breath as he closed his eyes for a moment. He looked as though he was about to be sick again. “I’ve done plenty of wrong in my life, but I don’t want to be the type of man who can kill someone in cold blood.” He opened his eyes to look at her. “Even someone who deserves it as much as Jack does.”

There was something about the way his voice changed, the way it seemed to carry to her so clearly on the wind, even with the noise of the train and the tracks, that made Esta pause.

But only for a moment.

This world didn’t allow for pausing or second-guessing. It wouldn’t permit her to keep whatever delicate sensibilities Harte thought she should have.

All at once the memory of Professor Lachlan’s library at the top of his building on Orchard Street arose in her mind. The dimmed lights. The smell of old books that had once meant safety. On her wrists, Esta could still feel the ache of bruises from the ropes that had held her to the chair. She could almost feel the heat of the stones Professor Lachlan had adorned her with, like the sacrifice he’d intended her to be. The man who had raised her would have used her affinity—used her—to unite the stones and take control of the Book’s power. You’re just the vessel. He would have killed her.

She lifted her hand to touch the still-healing wound just below her collarbone and closed her eyes against the memory of what had happened. . . . These things do tend to work better with a little blood.

That night had been less than twenty-four hours ago and was also still a hundred years to come. In the darkness behind her eyelids, another memory assaulted her—Dakari stepping into the room, unaware of what Professor Lachlan had planned. Unprepared for the bullet that came a few moments later.

The echo of the gun.

The sound of Dakari’s body collapsing, deadweight, to the floor.

And the weight of the guilt she bore for his death.

Maybe she’d never had any real softness to start with. Or maybe the last bit of softness had been killed as surely as Dakari that day. Either way, Esta knew that if she could live with the memory of that night, she could bear anything. Become anything. Harte might not have believed that she was strong enough, but Esta had already survived the senseless loss of her friends, of her family—of her father. A little blood on her hands for the sake of their memory and for the sake of their lives was hardly anything.

Besides, she knew that she wouldn’t have to carry any of it for very long. No matter what happened between now and the end, Professor Lachlan had already explained to her how the stones could be used to control the Book. She hadn’t yet told Harte. She didn’t know how he would react to learning that it would require sacrifice—her affinity and most likely her life—and they didn’t have time for him to get all noble again or have second thoughts. But then, she was a girl without a past and without a future. She’d already resigned herself to the fact that she had little hope of walking out of this alive.

Now they would have to live with the consequences of not killing Jack when they’d had the chance. Two years had passed, and during that time the world had continued on, history unspooling itself each day. Who knew what had changed in the days and weeks since Jack Grew got his hands on the Book and all the knowledge contained in its pages? Who knew what might wait for them at the station at the end of the line?

Harte looked like he was going to be sick again. Not that Esta blamed him. When she thought of Jack with the Book, she felt like throwing up too.

“It’ll be okay,” she told him after a few minutes of tense silence, the wind whipping at them as the train sped onward. She wasn’t sure that she believed it, but there didn’t seem to be anything else to say as the train hurtled down the track, careening toward some distant station she had never thought to see and toward a future that she was determined to meet head-on—the same way she met everything else.

“You know what Jack could do with the Book.” Harte turned from her, his eyes unfocused on the passing countryside. “The Order wouldn’t let him have access to it because they knew how dangerous it was, and I gave it to him. He’ll have secrets that even the Order was smart enough to keep away from him.”

Every bit of what he’d said was true, but still . . . “If Jack had kept you from getting on the train, it would have been over anyway.”

“I could have fought him,” Harte said, his jaw tense. “I could have beat him.”

“Sure. With the station police on your tail and all those people around and the train already leaving. A fistfight is exactly what would have worked.” When Harte glanced back at her, irritation shadowing his expression, she continued. “You had to get on this train—that train—whatever. You made a choice, just like I did. You did what you had to do to get away. Besides, Jack doesn’t really have all that much,” she reminded him. “The Book’s power is in you, right?”

Harte’s jaw clenched. “There’s still the information in its pages. That’s more than enough for it to be dangerous.”

“So we’ll just have get it back.” She pulled herself up to her feet again. “I’m a thief, aren’t I? I’ll steal it.”

He looked up at her. “It might be too late for that already.”

“If we can get control of my affinity, there is no such thing as too late.” Still, there was a part of her that worried Harte was right.

She offered him a hand up. “We can get off at the next station and figure out what to do.”

He ignored her offer of help. “We might as well wait until we get to Baltimore. We’ve already paid for the tickets,” he told her. “No sense getting off until we’re in a city that’s big enough to give us our pick of routes. It’s been two years,” he said, an answer to her unspoken question. “I don’t know where any of the people we need to find are now. I’ll have to send out some telegrams, make some inquiries. If Julien is still performing, he shouldn’t be that hard to find.”

Already, the crowded industrial-looking buildings of the area around the station had given way to more open land. The smell of the coal burning in the train’s engine was faint, and the air carried a scent she didn’t recognize—something green and fresh and earthy that didn’t exist in the city.

“We should probably get some seats,” she told him. “It’ll be a while before we reach Baltimore.”

Harte pulled himself upright without her help but held tight to the railing for a moment to steady himself. “Where did you get the money for the tickets?” he asked as he reached for the door to the car. He held it open for her to enter.

“Compliments of Jack,” she told him as she stepped through.

The car was almost entirely empty. In the front, an older man dozed with his head tucked into his own chest. He didn’t stir at the sound of the door opening or the noise of the tracks. Still, Harte lowered his voice when he spoke.

“You took Jack’s wallet?”

She shrugged. “He’s good for it. And he was a little . . . distracted at the time.” She slipped into an empty row of seats. When Harte didn’t immediately sit next to her, she glanced up at him. He was staring at her with an unreadable expression on his face. “What?”

“That’s why you were kissing him.”

At first his words didn’t make any sense. “Kissing . . . ?” Then she realized what was happening in that pretty little head of his. “You’re an idiot. You know that, right?”

Harte had the grace to look a little embarrassed as he slid into the seat next to her. “Yeah,” he muttered. “I’m aware.”

Esta wanted to say something more, but Harte’s attention had been drawn by the landscape speeding by. It was as though sitting on the platform of the train car, he hadn’t even seen it, but now she could have disappeared altogether and he wouldn’t have noticed. All Harte could see was the world outside the windows of the train—a world he had lied and stolen and cheated for.

She decided to let him have it. For now.

Through the seats, Esta could feel the vibrations of the rail, telegraphing the shape of the land they were crossing. She’d never thought she would leave the city—had never wanted to—but now she had to admit that the world was wider and more beautifully tempting than she could have expected. Already the towns were giving way to a landscape of fields carpeted with the lush green of summer crops, their stalks rippling in the breeze. The colors were more vibrant somehow. More raw and alive.

She wasn’t supposed to be there, beyond the boundaries of the city she had called home for so long.

She should be dead by now, but she had survived Professor Lachlan’s attempt to take her power—and her life. She had survived Jack’s gun pressed against her back.

For a moment she let herself lean her head against Harte’s shoulder and enjoy knowing that until the train pulled into the station, they were safe. Until the train arrived at their next station, it was just the two of them, the green of the landscape, and the steady cadence of the train.

But even as she allowed herself that one stolen moment of peace, Esta knew that her future was waiting. The world outside of that car might have changed in dangerous ways in the years they had skipped. There was only one thing she could be sure of when the train finally pulled into Baltimore: She would survive whatever came next. One step at a time, one moment and then another. Until she righted the wrongs that had been done . . . and made those who had caused them pay.

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Flora Ferrari, Mia Madison, Alexa Riley, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Sophie Stern, Elizabeth Lennox, Leslie North, Amy Brent, Frankie Love, C.M. Steele, Madison Faye, Jordan Silver, Jenika Snow, Dale Mayer, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Bella Forrest, Michelle Love, Delilah Devlin, Sloane Meyers, Piper Davenport, Amelia Jade,

Random Novels

Tempting the Flames (Where There's Smoke Book 2) by Em Petrova

Rebel Love (Kings of Corruption Book 2) by Michelle St. James

Treat Me by Angela Blake

Crazy In Love (South Bay Soundtracks) by Amelia Stone

Hallelujah Rising (Hells Saints Motorcycle Club Book 5) by Paula Marinaro

Prince Charming by CD Reiss

The Immortals II: Michael by Cynthia Breeding

Caveman: A Single Dad Next Door Romance by Jo Raven

The Highlander’s Gift: Book One: The Sutherland Legacy by Eliza Knight

All We Knew by Beck, Jamie

Love From Above: A Scifi Alien Romance (Yearning Book 1) by Stella Casey

Dirt Track Dogs (Complete Series): Plus Bonus Spin-off Books by P. Jameson

Laird of Her Heart (Dundragon Time Travel Trilogy Book 1) by Sabrina York

Alpha Mail by Brenda Rothert

Dangerous Indulgence: A Dark Mafia Romance (Omerta Series Book 6) by Roxy Sinclaire

Between 2 Bosses: A Menage Romance by Samantha Twinn

Bodyguard's Secret Baby (A Secret Baby Romance) by Vivian Ward

Distortion (The Avowed Brothers Book 3) by Kat Tobin

Sweet Beginnings: A Candle Beach Sweet Romance by Nicole Ellis

For a Muse of Fire by Heidi Heilig